AletheiAnveshana: Called to Bring Justice Is 58:7-10; 1 Cor 2:1-5; Mt5:13-16 (A 5)

Saturday, 7 February 2026

Called to Bring Justice Is 58:7-10; 1 Cor 2:1-5; Mt5:13-16 (A 5)

 

Called to Bring Justice

 

Is 58:7-10; 1 Cor 2:1-5; Mt5:13-16 (A 5)

“The cross of the Lord has become the tree of life for us.”

 

Around the same time that Isaiah was reviving a living faith among the people in Jerusalem (c. 742 B.C.), his contemporary up in northern Israel, the prophet Amos (c. 760–755 B.C.), was expressing his fierce indignation about the plight of the poor and needy, who were being denied justice in the courts (Am 5:7-15) and whose goods were confiscated (5:11). In his turn, Isaiah also makes an impassioned cry for social justice. His sense of fairness and sharing comes from his deep sense that God’s creativity and glory fill the whole earth (Is 6:3). The divine presence fills not only the temple but the whole of creation. Both focused on the exploitation of the poor, moral corruption, and the inevitability of divine judgment.  Yahweh desires all people to make justice flourish on the earth.

 

Following the teaching of the Beatitudes, Jesus uses the familiar metaphors of salt and light in today’s Gospel reading to describe the life of discipleship. We seem to take salt and light for granted in today’s society, but these commodities were more precious in ancient cultures. Salt is used for flavoring, as a preservative, and as a healing agent. The salt cannot be seen but can be perceived and relished. There are many people who “can hardly be perceived”, as they are like “little ants” working hard and doing good all the time. Some of them are “brought into the limelight on top of a mountain” or on a “lamp stand” (Mt 5:14-15), toiling to bring about justice to the deserving.

 

We are all called to be salt and light. It is said that once, while he was playing, someone asked St. Aloysius Gonzaga what he would do if he knew that within a few minutes he would be dying. “I would keep on playing”, he answered. He would go on carrying out his normal life. Our commitment to social justice flows from the exhortation that Jesus gives us in today’s Gospel. Some of the activities that this commitment leads us to are given more concrete expression as the corporal and spiritual works of mercy. When we feed the hungry, clothe the naked, console those who mourn, and so on, we show ourselves to be the salt of the earth and the light of the world. When we do these things with the community of faith, the Church, we are indeed acting as “a city set on a mountain” that cannot be hidden!

 

Pope Francis called on Catholics to “go out to the margins.” He preferred a church that is “bruised and dirty because it has been out on the streets” to one that is “clinging to its own security, caught up in a web of procedures.” We can’t hunker down in our structures with passive hope. The Gospel invites us to run the risk of meeting others in need. It wants to promote a culture of encounter, because what our Church needs today is to heal wounds and to warm hearts.

 

“Let the word of Christ dwell with you in all its richness”.

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